Fourteenth
International Conference onArchitectural Support for Programming Languages and Operating
Systems
(ASPLOS '09)

Paper
Submission Instructions

NOTE: The submission deadlines for the abstracts and
full-papers are based on the countdown clock on the submissions site (Samoa
Time). Please e-mail the Program Chair (mji@cse.psu.edu)
if you have any questions.

Please make sure that your paper satisfies all the below mentioned
requirements before submission.

- The paper must have an abstract of a maximum of 250 words and must be
submitted by August 1st, 2008.

- You will not be allowed to submit a full paper without submitting an abstract
first.

- The paper must be original material that has not been previously published in
another conference or journal, nor is currently under review by another
conference or journal. Note that you may submit material presented previously at
a workshop without copyrighted proceedings.

- Your submission is limited to twenty two (22) 8.5"x11" double spaced single
column pages, using 11pt or larger font. Please make sure you leave enough
margin (roughly one inch) on both sides of the text so that it prints correctly
on an A4 size paper as well.

- Papers are to be submitted for double-blind review. Author names as well as
hints of identity are to be removed from the submitted paper.

In addition, do not omit references to provide anonymity, as this leaves the
reviewer unable to grasp the context. Instead, if you reference your own work,
you need to do it in third person, as if you were referencing someone else's
research.

- Your paper must be formatted in such a way that it is clear to understand
(including plots and diagrams) with a black and white print-out.

- Please number the pages.

- The paper must be submitted in PDF format. We cannot accept any other format,
and we must be able to print the document just as we receive it. We strongly
suggest that you use only the four widely-used printer fonts: Times, Helvetica,
Courier and Symbol.

Guidelines on conflict of interest:We define a
conflict of interest as:

- Your Ph.D. advisor and Ph.D. students forever.
- Family relations by blood or marriage forever. - People with whom you collaborated in the past five years.
- Collaborators, include co-authors on an accepted/rejected/pending research
paper, co-PIs on an accepted/rejected/pending grant, those who fund of your
research, and researchers who you fund. "Service" collaborations, such as
writing CSTB report or serving on a program committee, are not a
conflict-of-interest by themselves. - People who were employed or a student your primary institution(s) in the past
five years. - Others with whom you believe a conflict of interest exists (check with the
general or program chair if you have a question or doubt).